Atlantic Steamer Supply Company v. the SS Tradewind

153 F. Supp. 354, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3242
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJune 11, 1957
Docket3799
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 153 F. Supp. 354 (Atlantic Steamer Supply Company v. the SS Tradewind) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Steamer Supply Company v. the SS Tradewind, 153 F. Supp. 354, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3242 (D. Md. 1957).

Opinion

R. DORSEY WATKINS, District Judge.

This is a continuation of a proceeding in admiralty in rem to determine the proper distribution-of -the proceeds from the sale of the Steamship Tradewind, a foreign documented vessel. The case is now before the court on (1) the motion of W. Harry Smith Agencies, Inc., a foreign supplier, for leave to amend its intervening libel and for reconsideration of this court’s opinion of August 7, 1956, 1 insofar as that decision held that “the liens of the foreign suppliers [are] subordinated to the lien of the preferred mortgage”, 2 together with the answer and exceptions of the Alaska Steamship Company, mortgagee, 3 to such amended libel; and on (2) the exceptions of the Alaska Steamship Company to the intervening libel of Larrabee Associates, a partnership engaged in the advertising business with its principal place of business in Washington, D. C., claiming a maritime lien.

Claim of The W. Harry Smith Agencies, Inc.

The W. Harry Smith Agencies, Inc., (Smith) was engaged by the Caribbean Atlantic Steamship Company, the owner and mortgagor of The Tradewind, as a special agent to furnish port, cargo, passenger, ship and sundry facilities to and on behalf of the vessel in the port of Havana, Cuba, and such services were rendered the ship on three voyages she made to the port of Havana between July 31, 1955, and October 1, 1955. On November 9, 1955, the Caribbean Atlantic *356 Steamship-Company filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy scheduling liabilities of $587,000 and assets of $385,000 including The Tradewind listed as valued at $332,000 but which later sold for $222,-000.

On the basis of these facts 4 and relying on section 953 of Title 46 U.S.C.A. which defines a preferred maritime lien 5 and accords it priority over the preferred mortgage lien, Smith seeks to build its maritime lien as a supplier into a preferred maritime lien for damages arising out of tort by amending its intervening libel to allege that “on all of the aforementioned dates the officers of the Caribbean Atlantic Steamship Company, Inc. [sic], knew of that company’s insolvency and the financial inability of the SS Tradewind to pay for the aforementioned port, cargo, passenger, ship and sundry facilities, services and materials furnished by The W. Harry Smith Agencies, Inc., to and for the benefit of the S.S. Tradewind and, therefore in effect accepted payments for the same fraudulently.” (Emphasis supplied). By answer and exceptions the mortgagee, Alaska Steamship Company (Alaska) stated no objection to the making of the requested amendment but reserved the right to contend that the failure to claim a preferred maritime lien in the original intervening libel of Smith indicated, in and of itself, a lack of merit in the intervening libel, as amended, and that as a matter of law no preferred maritime lien arose out of the facts set forth in the amended intervening libel. The amendment was allowed in open court.

As authority for its contention in its amended libel, Smith cites an opinion of this court by Judge Soper, then a district judge, in which the liens claimed by certain shippers for damages occasioned by the complete failure of the vessel to sail were based on the fraudulent 6 conduct of the ship in accepting prepayment of freight for cargo actually placed on board at a time when the vessel's corporate owner was insolvent and the ship was clearly unable to perform the services which she held herself out to the community as being capable of rendering. The court in that case, The Henry W. Breyer, D.C.Md.1927, 17 F.2d 423, 431, said:

“On another ground, the shippers were justified in alleging that they were damaged by acts of the vessel which amounted to torts. The complete financial inability of the owner of the vessel to comply with the obligations of a common carrier is so-clearly shown by the testimony that, it must have been known to the managers of the vessel when the cargo-was taken on board. The action,, therefore, in accepting the goods,, and particularly in receiving the freight money in advance, from the-intervening libelants, was in effect fraudulent. The navigation corporation was doubtless insolvent, and the situation was analogous to that which has been frequently before-the courts in reclamation proceedings in bankruptcy. It is a general principle that, when a person who is-insolvent purchases goods with no-intention of paying for them, and conceals his insolvency and his intention not to pay, he is guilty of fraud which entitles the vendor to-recover the goods. Knowledge of inability to pay when the purchase is made is equivalent to purchase-with intent not to pay. Such purpose is constructively fraudulent. In re Henry Siegel Co., (D.C.) 223 F. 369; Gillespie v. Piles & Co., (C.C.A.) 178 F. 886 [44 L.R.A.,N.S., *357 1]; Hornor v. Henning, 93 U.S. 228, 23 L.Ed. 879; In re K. Marks & Co., (C.C.A.) 218 F. 453; Jones v. H. M. Hobbie Grocery Co. (C.C.A.) 246 F. 431; In re Liebig (C.C.A.) 255 F. 458; In re Stewart (D.C.) 178 F. 463; In re Kenyon (D.C.) 156 F. 863. It was equally fraudulent for the ship to accept payment for services which she was clearly unable to perform.” (Emphasis supplied).

It at once becomes apparent by a comparison of the underlined portions of Smith’s amended intervening libel with the underlined portions of the opinion in The Henry W. Breyer that the former is, at the most, nothing more than an allegation of personal fraud on the part of the officers of the corporate shipowner, while the latter clearly makes the well established distinction in admiralty between the shipowner and the ship. Where the fraud of the owner is of a personal nature, a claim for damages arising out of that fraud does not constitute a lien upon, or a claim against, the vessel. International Refugee Organization v. Maryland Drydock Co., 4 Cir., 1950, 179 F.2d 284, 288. Judge Chesnut in Todd Shipyards Corporation v. City of Athens, 7 D.C.Md.1949, 83 F.Supp. 67, 76, considering the import of the decision in The Henry W. Breyer as being “only a recognition of a long existing right of a claimant to sue in tort for damages resulting from wrongful action of a common carrier with respect to passengers or cargo after they had physically come within the control- of the carrier”, refused to hold a ship liable in tort 8 for breach of an executory contract for the transportation of passengers who had not come within the care or control of the carrier; finding the obligation to transport that of the owner, not of the vessel.

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153 F. Supp. 354, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-steamer-supply-company-v-the-ss-tradewind-mdd-1957.